Pre-operative parenteral nutrition in patients with oesophageal cancer: a prospective, randomised clinical trial

Clin Nutr. 1989 Feb;8(1):23-7. doi: 10.1016/0261-5614(89)90021-6.

Abstract

A prospective randomised clinical trial was conducted to examine the efficacy of 2 weeks pre-operative parenteral nutrition (PPN) for the prevention of complications following surgery for oesophageal cancer. Forty patients were studied, the diet of twenty being supplemented by pre-operative parenteral nutrition. There were no significant differences in age, nutritional status, tumour staging and histology between the two groups of patients. The use of PPN resulted in a significant gain in body weight and nitrogen but failed to produce an overall reduction in post-operative morbidity and mortality rates. However patients receiving PPN exhibited two types of changes in serum albumin levels. Those with a fall in serum albumin levels associated with an increase in body weight (indicating an expansion of extracellular volume) had a significantly higher incidence of post-operative pulmonary complications than the group exhibiting a rise in serum albumin levels concomitant with increase in body weight. These data suggested that two weeks PPN might not be adequate in certain patients and a longer period of PPN is required. They also show no clinical benefit from the routine use of pre-operative parenteral nutrition in all patients, but do not exclude benefit in selected groups.